billy g Wrote:
Yeah, don't vote for McCain but why Obama? Republicans have been acting like socialists enough without having to try to interpret what conservatives voting for Obama means.
Absolutely nothing, nothing about the last 8 years has been "socialist." Republicans have been corrupt, fascist (Patriot act, torture and other violations of the constitution), Neo-liberal globalist market policies, tax breaks for the rich, profligate spending, inept governance, strict constructionist judges.... absolutley nothing about them have been socialist. This is sloppy thinking and partisan essentialism that is a core problem in American political discourse.... not worthy of you. The distribution of wealth in the country has moved rapidly to the rich and privileged since the early 80's, and that movement has exponentially increased in speed since 2000.
There has been a strong resistance to Bush III by conservatives and related move to Obama for more than a year... from my millionaire brother to Andrew Sullivan to Andrew Bacevich
Quote:
Andrew J. Bacevich's pro-Obama piece, published in March in The American Conservative, is the "seminal Obamacon manifesto."
In that piece, Bacevich argues that conservative revival depends on a US withdrawal from Iraq, which Obama supports -- and Republican John McCain vehemently opposes.
"Barack Obama is no conservative," Bacevich starts his article. "Yet if he wins the Democratic nomination, come November principled conservatives may well find themselves voting for the senator from Illinois. Given the alternatives -- and the state of the conservative movement -- they could do worse.
"The essential point is this: conservatives intent on voting in November for a candidate who shares their views might as well plan on spending Election Day at home," Bacevich continues. "The Republican Party of Bush, Cheney, and McCain no longer accommodates such a candidate.
"So why consider Obama? For one reason only: because this liberal Democrat has promised to end the U.S. combat role in Iraq. Contained within that promise, if fulfilled, lies some modest prospect of a conservative revival.
"For conservatives, Obama represents a sliver of hope. McCain represents none at all. The choice turns out to be an easy one," Bacevich concludes.